Response Group Configuration Prerequisites and Permissions

Lync Server 2010

Topic Last Modified: 2012-10-16

Response Group is an Enterprise Voice call management feature. This topic describes what you need to have in place before you can configure Response Group and the administrative credentials and permissions you need to perform configuration tasks.

This section assumes that you have read the planning documentation related to Response Group. For details, see Planning for Call Management Features in the Lync Server 2010 Planning documentation.

The first step in configuring Response Group is creating agent groups. Before you can create an agent group, you must enable the users who will be agents for response groups for Lync Server 2010 and Enterprise Voice. Enabling users for Lync Server 2010 is typically a step in the Enterprise Edition or Standard Edition server deployment. For details about enabling users for Lync Server 2010, see Enable or Disable Users for Lync Server 2010. Enabling users for Enterprise Voice is typically a step in the Enterprise Voice deployment. For details about enabling users for Enterprise Voice, see Enable Users for Enterprise Voice.

This section applies to you only if your organization needs to comply with Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS).

To be compliant with FIPS, you need to modify the application-level Web.config file to use a different cryptography algorithm after you install Web Services. You need to specify that ASP.NET use the Triple Data Encryption Standard (3DES) algorithm to process view state data. For the Response Group application, this requirement applies to the Response Group Configuration Tool and the agent sign-in and sign-out console. For details about this requirement, see Microsoft Knowledge Base article 911722, "You may receive an error message when you access ASP.NET webpages that have ViewState enabled after you upgrade from ASP.NET 1.1 to ASP.NET 2.0," at http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/p/?LinkId=3052&kbid=911722.

To modify the Web.config file, do the following:

In a text editor such as Notepad, open the application-level Web.config file.

In the Web.config file, locate the <system.web> section.

Add the following <machineKey> section to in the <system.web> section:

This section applies to you only if your organization needs to support Yi, Meng, or Zang characters.

To support Yi, Meng, or Zang characters, you need to modify the collation for the Rgsconfig database. Change the collation of the Name column in the following tables in each Rgsconfig database:

dbo.AgentGroups

dbo.BusinessHours

dbo.HolidaySets

dbo.Queues

dbo.Workflows

The collation that you use depends on the version of the Microsoft SQL Server database software that you have installed:

If you have SQL Server 2005 installed, use Latin1_General (Binary Sort). If you need to use this collation, all object names become case-sensitive.

If you have SQL Server 2008 R2 or SQL Server 2008 installed, use Latin_General_100 (Accent Sensitive). If you use this collation, all object names are not case-sensitive.

You can change the collation by using Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio. For details about using this tool, see "Using SQL Server Management Studio" at http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/p/?LinkId=196184. Follow these steps to change the collation: